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| Cultural Landscape |
The Cultural Landscape Zone addresses the overall setting in which is found not only historic structures, but also non-structural evidence of the traditions, beliefs, practices, lifestyles, arts, crafts and social institutions of any community. For example, a location associated with a particular culture, such as a Native American sacred burial ground or an abandoned mine town site, representative of a bygone era, would qualify as a Cultural Landscape Zone. This zone can be a subset of one of the other resource zones and, as such, the guidance for that zone will also apply.
1. Natural Resources:
2. Historic/Cultural Resources:
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Includes historic buildings, structures, and other landscape characteristics and features which represent the evolution of the cultural resource, temporal change, and the continuum of time.
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Cultural resources preserved or rehabilitated for visitor understanding and/or for compatible adaptive use by DNR or partners.
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Historic structures could be adaptively used for operational uses or educational purposes.
3. Recreation Opportunities:
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Visitors engaged in sightseeing, recreational, and educational activities in a cultural setting such as automobile, bicycle, walking, hiking tours compatible with and sensitive to the setting.
4. Education Opportunities:
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Interpretive signage at trail heads, on the trail, overlooks and other points of interest.
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Off-site interpretation as well.
5. Visitor Experience:
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Moderate visitor encounters are accommodated.
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Visitors engaged in sightseeing, recreational, and educational activities in a cultural setting such as automobile, bicycle, walking and hiking tours.
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Moderate time commitment.
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Moderate on-site interpretation.
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Moderate off-site interpretation.
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Moderate noise tolerance.
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Moderate interaction with DNR staff.
6. Management Focus:
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Maintain cultural character of the zone and, if a sub-set of a resource zone, maintain emphasis on natural resource quality.
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Keep development consistent with the zone.
7. Development:
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Non-historic development and activities that do not conflict with the cultural landscape are tolerated.
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Moderate level of development to support visitor access and use such as interpretive media, walkways, trails, small picnic areas and restrooms.
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Development compatible with the cultural landscape.
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Moderate accessibility.
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